31. It hath been said--This shortened form was perhaps intentional,
to mark a transition from the commandments of the Decalogue to a civil
enactment on the subject of divorce, quoted from
De 24:1.
The law of divorce--according to its strictness or laxity--has so
intimate a bearing upon purity in the married life, that nothing could
be more natural than to pass from the seventh commandment to the loose
views on that subject then current.
Whosoever shall put away his wife, let him give her a writing of
divorcement--a legal check upon reckless and tyrannical separation.
The one legitimate ground of divorce allowed by the enactment just
quoted was "some uncleanness"--in other words, conjugal infidelity. But
while one school of interpreters (that of SHAMMAI)
explained this quite correctly, as prohibiting divorce in every case
save that of adultery, another school (that of
HILLEL) stretched the expression so far as to
include everything in the wife offensive or disagreeable to the
husband--a view of the law too well fitted to minister to caprice and
depraved inclination not to find extensive favor. And, indeed, to this
day the Jews allow divorces on the most frivolous pretexts. It was to
meet this that our Lord uttered what follows:
JFB.
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